LYRICS and JINGLES 



By FREDERICK F. SCHRADER 

(Editor New York Dramatic Mirror). 



Author of the lyrics in ''Baron Trenck," (Albini); "The 

Gascon," (Suppe); "Soldier of Fortune," (Czibulka); 

"The Lady in Red," (Winterfeld); and author of 

"Corsica," (Berge); "Nicolette," (Berge); 

"Knave of Hearts," (Berge). 



-o — 



"The art of writing singable lyrics is a knack. 
Schrader has the knack." — London{Sunday)Times, 

" Where there are a hundred who can write 
humorous and sentimental verse, not two can 
write a lyric fit for the stage. It is one of the 
rarest of gifts." — From a Musical Magazine. 



(Copyright By Frederick F. Schrader 1913) 






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DCi.A046243 



hii 



"THE ACTOR/' 
(From "Nicolette.*') 

I am an actor of roles quite uncountable. 
Risen to fame over bars insurmountable. 
Though I proclaim it (I hope with propriety). 
No one can touch me in scope and variety. 
I can act anything; my repertoire 
Is of all actors' the largest by far: 

I'm a tragedian 

And a comedian; 

My art is infinite, 

Nero or Pierrot, 

(Heroes in black and white) ; 

Magical, 

Tragical, 

Sombre- faced clerical. 

Lover hysterical; 

Types drawn by Diderot, 

Beaumarchais' Figaro; 

Jealous Othello 

Or lean Punchinello; 

Also in song and dance 

I am par excellence. 

And, for a change, I do 

Juggling and tumbling, too! 

All who have seen me have praised me excessively. 
For I portray all my roles so expressively; 
Only the critics carp ; that base fraternity 
Says that I put them to sleep for eternity. 
I can act anything; my repertoire 
Is of all actors' the largest by far. 
I'm a tragedian, etc. 

I care not whether a play is historical, 
Or deals with picturesque themes allegorical. 
Mysteries, pantomimes, so ad infinitum, 
I am as great as the best, at a minimum. 
I can act anything, etc. 

I dare say you would (if not too dyspeptical). 
Like my Othello, portrayed epileptical. 



Or the rash Romeo, mad and emotional; 
Hamlet, the dreamer, so morbid and notional ; 
For I play anything ; my repertoire 
Is of all actors' the largest by far. 

I'm ai tragedian 

And a comedian, etc. 



"FISHERMAN'S SONG." 
(From the l^ric drama, ^'Corsica.*' Music f)p Irenee Berge.) 

Of all the fish that swim the sea, 
Not one can lure or tangle me. 
The only fish that's my delight 
Is fair and white. 
She has a graceful form, has she. 
And she's the Queen of all the sea. 

Hullee, hullo. 

Let the wet winds blow! 

Hullee, hullo, 

Let the wet winds blow! 

I sing my cheer, hullee, hullo! 

My sweetheart is a mermaid, oh. 

That lives upon a grizzly rock 

'Mid tempests' shock. 

Let winds and waves make dashing spray. 

Let tempests roar and breakers play, 

Hullee, hullo. 

Let the wet winds blow! 

Hullee, hullo, 

Let the wet winds blow! 

Hullee, hullo! 

And when the angry waves subside 

I often moor my boat beside 

The grizzly rock far out at sea. 

Where dwelleth she! 

She sits high on her parapet 

And flirts with me, the gay coquette ! 

Hullee, hullo, 

Let the wet winds blow! 



BALLAD OF KARABOO. 

("Nicolette.") 

Once an ape named Karaboo 
Came from distant Timbuctoo. 
He longed much the world to see. 
So he landed in Paree. 
The ape was enterprising; 
*Twas not at all surprising 
That he, that he 
Should love this gay Paree. 

As he went about he learned 

There were apes where'er he turned; 

And, as he was such a swell 

They received him very well. 

He played the concertino, 

The jewsharp, also keno. 

And lo! And lo! 

He soon was all the go! 

Touched was every lady's heart 
By the magic of his art. 
With his concertino he 
Was the rage at every tea. 
He played with so much unction 
At every social function, 
His name, the same 
Soon rose to mighty fame. 

Then a banker's daughter, she 
Asked him, *'Will you marry me? 
I am worth ten million francs. 
Papa owns a dozen banks." 
And Karaboo relented 
And finally consented. 



And they, and they 
Lived happily for aye. 

Now a mighty progeny. 
Leaders of society, 
Boast with pride and much ado 
Of the House of Karaboo. 
And so does every flunky 
Whose grandsire was a monkey. 

(To Audience) : 

Do you? And you? 

Well, look up "Who is Who?" 



LOVE SONG. 
(Music b^ Irenee Berge.) 

I longed for you, dear love, awake or dreaming. 

Where'er I roamed by fortune's hard decree; 
I loved but you, in spite of all my seeming — 

There was, alas, there was no peace for me! 
I longed for you with every heart's pulsation; 

And every star that beams so high above, 
Yes, every star in yon bright constellation 

Will tell you of my love, sweet love! 
Yes, every star in yon bright constellation 

Was charged to send you tokens of my love. 

I dreamt of you, dear heart, and of you only; 

You seemed so near and yet so far away. 
In hours of sadness, when my heart was lonely. 

You came, a vision bright, in soft array. 
And spoke to me in accents sweet and tender 

That swayed my soul with love's compelling power; 
Then come, my love, your heart to me surrender. 

And be my own, my own this hour. 
Oh come, my love, your heart to me surrender, 

And be my own, my own, my own, this hour! 

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"A TOAST TO ADELINE." 
{Music by Joseph C. BreiL) 

Within an ancient banquet hall 

Rose knight and cavalier. 
To toast the bride who wept aside 

And joined not in their cheer. 
At last the groom in cloak and plume 

Raised high a cup of wine, 
And cried: "I drink this blood-red grape 

To Lady Adeline. 
She scorned my hand and all my land. 

But, by the holy rood! 
I'll ne'er give in to woman's whim. 

By force shall she be wooed. 
Let come who will from heav'n or hell. 

To challenge what is mine. 
I've made my boast, I drink this toast 

To Lady Adeline!" 

He gazed about with sombre brows. 

And hushed was jest and song; 
When quickly through the door there strode 

A gallant youth and strong. 
He seized a cup of blood-red wine 

And drew his glittering sword. 
And raised them high with flashing eye 

Above the banquet board. 
••I have defied his guards." he cried. 

"To slay this base-bom lord. 
You've heard his boast, you've heard his toast; 

Now hark ye, too, to mine: 
I quaff this cup to one made up 

Of loveliness divine. 
She is my pride, my promised bride; 

A toast to Adeline!" 

Loud cries were heard as swords were bared. 

And both stood face to face; 
Nor flinched they till their heart's blood stained 

The whiteness of their lace. 
Alas for Lady Adeline, 



Alas, the gallant knight! 
His loyal heart but feebly throbbed 

Whose face was now so white. 
"Oh, press a kiss upon my lips 

Before I breathe my last. 
Eternal bliss is in thy kiss," 

The youth sighed, failing fast. 
"Staunch not my blood, but let the flood 

Merge with the crimson wine, 
And let it flow and mingle so, 

A toast to Adeline!" 



"CUPID." 
(From the opera of Nicolette.) 

What is this thing that men call Love, 
And some say came from heaven above? 

A short-lived joy, 

A paltry toy, 
A plaything, like a waxen doll 
To while away the time withal — 

Sad is my lot; 

I know him not! 

I laugh at Love and all his wiles. 
Am not responsive to his smiles. 

Some pine and sigh. 

Ha ha! NotL 
What can avail his subtle art 
Against a well-protected heart? 

I scorn his darts 

And all his arts! 

Who is this scapegrace from the sky 
That buzzes round you like a fly? 

I'd put to flight 

This brazen wight. 
Should he attune my heart to tears! 
Ah, well! I'd simply box his ears. 

Let others sigh; 

Ha ha! Not I. 

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'TWEEN DANCES. 

Among the season's debutantes 

Is Violet, sweet sixteen, 
Her mind aglow with pink romance. 

Her gown a pale marine. 
Her partner has a winning way. 

Her heart is swelled with bliss — 
When suddenly, so light and gay. 
He tries to steal a kiss! 
Her face it turns crimson with blushes so hot; 
Her mamma, she says, made her promise she'd not; 
**Don't ever," said mamma, 

"Good manners transgress; 
Say 'no' when you're dancing. 
And never say 'yes'!" 
And then she smiles shyly and whispers quite low, 
With coquetry rare and elusive: 
"In the interval, sir; 
In the interval, sir; 
In the interval we'll be exclusive! 

She chased the hours on twinkling feet. 

Her heart was all atune; 
The little maiden's pulses beat; 

The end came all too soon. 
And in the carriage, homeward bound. 

She cried in rapturous bliss : 
"How sweet the memories of this night. 
But most of all that kiss!" 
"I told you," cried mamma, "to be on your guard." 
"O mamma, the gentleman begged me so hard!" 
"You foolish young damsel. 

How could you act so ? 
I told you distinctly 
To always say no!" 
"While dancing, you said, and I strictly obeyed; 

I told him you'd never permit it — 
But— 

"In the interval, ma; 
In the interval, ma ; 
In the interval, that's when we did it! 



"LISETTE." 
(From ** Baroness Paula.**) 

Lisette, you wilful lass. 

Resistance is in vain; 
So smile into my glass 

And let*s be friends again. 
Alphonse, the happy knave, 

With him I found you out; 
The kisses that he gave 

You took without a pout. 
Lisette, ma Lisette, 

Tu mas trompe toujours; 
Mais vive la griseite! 
Je veux, Lisette, 

Boire a nos amours. 

Rene, the rogue, who brings 

Bright ribbons which you prize. 
Commits the boldest things 

Before my very eyes, 
And you repay him more. 

Base girl, remember this, 
And let my glass run o'er — 

A glass for every kiss. 

Lisette, ma Lisette, etc. 

One evening to your door 

I stole with noiseless tread; 
A thief who came before 

Out of your window fled. 
Lisette, O my Lisette, 

You're false, but let that pass; 
To you, my sweet grisette, 

I'll drain another glass. 

Lisette, ma Lisette, etc. 

ID 



"NIGHT WATCHMAN'S SONG." 

(From **Love Laughs at Locksmiths'* — comic opera in 

one act.) 

When I was young I used to be 

The tail-end pupil of the school. 
I hardly knew my a, b, c, 

And Master said I was a fool. 
I got a thrashing every day. 

And all the blame was put on me, 
Since I was sure to go astray 

In anything with *'ology." 

As I grew up I made my way 

By slow degrees from place to place; 
I was a cook and drove a dray. 

And never fell into disgrace; 
Except on one occasion, I 

To show how I could cook and bake. 
Prepared a dainty rabbit pie 

And cut a cat up, by mistake. 

I longed for fame on land and sea, 

(I wasn't so particular) ; 
I thought a hero I would be. 

And so enlisted for the war. 
I was all right until one night 

Our side was ordered to attack. 
We had a brush, and in the fight 

A bullet struck me in the back. 

No matter what I undertook 

I always came out wrong end first. 
As soldier, sailor, driver, cook. 

They said I was the very worst; 
But, having served my country, they 

Gave me a pension and the right 
To slumber through the livelong day 

And be the guardian of the night. 

II 



BALLAD OF THE FOX HUNT. 

Ohey! Yahoy! 

Through deep ravines. 
O'er wooded heights, 

'Mid savage scenes. 
The huntsman roves 

To trail his game; 
With joyous heart 

And loud acclaim. 
With gun and hound. 

At break of day. 
He's up and off 

And far away. 
Ohey! Yahoy! 

By brook and rill. 
Hullo! Hallay! 

O'er vale and hill! 

I could sing you a merry old song, I know, 
Oh, the sort of a song that they sang long ago. 
Of the huntsman a-warbling his glad tralalee 
In a baritone voice that went down to G, 
O'er the far-lying hills, through the echoing dale; 
But I'm not going to sing you a song quite so stale. 

Then a ho and hullo. 

With a heart all aglow, 
I will tell you a merry old tale. 

In the days when we went out with hound and horn, 
A begrizzled old fox put his head out one mom 
And remarked, "I declare! What a hullabaloo! 
They're coming to get me. I know what to do!" 
So he got an old aniseed bag from his lair, 
And he trailed it about for a mile everywhere, 

With a ho and hullo. 

Running swift to and fro, 
A scurvy old trick, I declare. 

For along came the pack, with the sports behind. 

With their horns and their hounds, but the fox didn't mind. 

He just dropped the old bag o'er a precipice steep 

And returned to his lair, where he went fast asleep, 

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While the hunt took its course o*er field and o'er crag 
And the hounds and the hunters were holding the bag 
With a ho and hullo. 
And with nothing to show 
But an aniseed-scented old rag! 



*'NICOLETTE." 
{Music tp hence Berge.) 



In these solemn halls ancestral 

Spooks and ghosts were wont to roam; 
Steel-clad knights and ill-clad ladies 

Haunted dungeon-keep and dome! 
In the corridors strange noises, 

Rattling chains and shuddering wail. 
Broke the solemn midnight watches 

Till my childish heart would quail! 

Where the cold moon shines and shimmers 

Over parapet and moat, 
Oft in winter came the demons 

Each astride a nanny-goat! 
Right across the moor and meadow 

Clattered the infernal host! 
Some declared it was the geeses. 

But I know it was a ghost! 

Sometimes frantic roars of laughter. 

Coming somewhere from the park, 
Almost underneath my window. 

Nearly scared me stiff and stark. 
For the statue of my grandpa. 

In the moonbeams pale and chill, 
Used to dance with that of Venus 

A spectacular quadrille. 

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DAS SCHAEFER MAID 
(A Yodle.) 

O, das Schaefer maid 

On der Alpenspitz, 
In der cooling shade 

Of her cottage sits; 
Und der Schaefer boob 

Mit sein Feder-hoot 
Spiels a serenade 

On his willow-flute, 
Oldiay-olay, oldiayolay, 
Oldiayolay, olay, olay! 

He makes goo-goo eyes 

At das Schaefer maid, 
Und die Maid she sighs 

At his serenade. 
"Lieber schatz," says he, 

"Here upon der spot 
Will you marry me 

Oder will you not?*' 

Den a billy-goat 

Mit a red mustache. 
Feeding on his coat. 

Cans und other trash, 
Hears der Schaefer play. 

Making eyes like sheep. 
Comes up from behind 

Mit a running leap, 

Down goes Schaefer boob 

Mit an awful crash, 
Und der billy-goat 

Strokes his good mustache. 
While die Schaefer maid 

Cries, "Ah, sad is it!** 
As she picks him up 

Little bit by bit. 

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"DEEDLE DOODLE." 
(Music by Oscar Straus.) 

On a June day, bright and rosy, 

Tom came strolling o'er the lea, 
In his hat a pretty posy 

And his young heart full of glee. 
Broke into a merry yodle, 
Doodle, doodle, doodle, dodle. (Simply.) 
"See the pretty flowers I've got thee, 

Daisy, rose, and columbine; 
Proof, my love, I've not forgot thee. 
That I love thee, maiden mine!** 

A composer heard this ditty 

As he chanced to pass that way. 
And, remarking "That's quite pretty," 

Stole the tune without delay. 
Turned it over in his noddle. 

For an opera, diddle, doddle. (In Grand Opera Style,) 
"With a heart of tender feeling 
'Mid sweet rose and eglantine, 
Softly on my tip-toes stealing, 
I am waiting, Josephine." 

Then a pretty vaudevillian 

Heard the charming chansonet. 
And she sang it like fair Lillian 

As a comic song soubrette 
To a millionaire young noodle. 

Diddle, doodle, diddle, doodle! (Like a Variety Actress.) 
"Take these orchids, Daisy Tupper, 

As a mark of my esteem. 
Later join me at a supper 

Where the tempting white lights gleam." 

By and by in each direction 

People hummed and thrummed that tune; 
Phonographs caught the infection 

And the brass bands, very soon. 
Ratata, tshing, tshing, bum-bum! 

Deedle, doodle, deedle dum. (Sing with closed lips like a 
comet. ) 

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Every comer now is ringing 
With the fascinating tune. 
And the village glee club's singing 

It beneath the pallid moon 
As a nerve-distracting twaddle. 
Diddle, doddle, diddle, dawdle. (In bass voice.) 
*'Love accept this tender blossom 

As a tribute of esteem." {In tenor voice.} 
**Wear these flowers upon your bosom; 

Of you ever will I dream; yes, dream; yes, 
dream.** 

Tommy's song at last was fated 

To be whistled in the street 
As a coon-song, syncopated 

With a crazy rag-time beat. 
Till it even bored the poodle. 
Diddle, doodle, diddle, doodle. (Ragtime.) 
"Flowers red and green and showy 

From de meadows whar dey grow. 
To my yaller gal. Sweet Chloe, 
Alexander Rastus Snow.** 



CAN YOU GUESS? 



Young husband is married six months to a day ; 

He*s tired of the opera, he's tired of the play. 

"I think, dear, I'll pass all the evening with you,'* 

He says to his wdfe, "if I knew what to do. 

I wish you would find something thrilling to read, 

A genuine thrill is the thing that I need." 

Can you guess, can you guess what it is 
That she told him to read? Only this: 

It wasn't a novel to give him a thrill. 

She told him to read — ^her milliner's bill. 

Can you guess? Can you guess? Can you guess? 

Young Tommy would rather be busy at play 
Than go to that tiresome old school every day. 
So Tommy plays truant two days every week. 
Although he pretends to be moral and meek. 

i6 



One day he*s confronted by teacher, alack! 
With something he*s holding concealed at his back. 
Can you guess? Can you guess what it is 
That's making poor Tom cry *'Gee whiz!"? 
It's not a diploma ; it isn't a toy ; 
It isn't a thing that a boy would enjoy. 

Can you guess? Can you guess? Can you guess? 

All tired out with business, the tired business man 

Decides rather late on an excellent plan. 

He'll go to the playhouse. "Let's see what's the bill." 

He's looking for something to give him a thrill. 

He sits out an act, but the show proves a bore. 

When all of a sudden he hollers "Encore!" 

Can you guess? Can you guess what it is 
Can you guess what has stirred him like this ? 
It isn't the drama, it isn't the show — 
It's something he won't tell his wifey, you know. 

Can you guess? Can you guess? Can you guess? 

His wife doesn't think he is doing quite right. 

She is weary of staying at home every night, 

Of feeding the poodle, of petting the cat. 

She's got a young coachman, his name being Pat. 

He jumps at her bidding, her beck and her call, 

He'd jump, if she asked him, a twenty-foot wall — 
Can you guess? Can you guess what it is 
That attracts her to Patrick like this? 

They ride in the gloaming; it isn't his birth. 

It isn't his fortune, it isn't his worth — 

Can you guess ? Can you guess ? Can you guess ? 



AT THE BALL. 



The air is heavy with the breath of flowers 
That freight with drowsy stress the glowing hours; 
The tremor of a deep-toned midnight bell 
Is drowned in music's own voluptuous swell. 
A thousand lights shed lustre 

Upon the proud and regal beauty of the fete; 
Within her scented orbit 

She moves, a Cleopatra in imperial state; 

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Tall and majestic, beautiful and fair. 

Conscious of the grace that marks her every air ; 

A modern Venus with Madonna face, 

A pallid statue she in sable lace. 

And on her marble breast there gleams a costly gem. 
And in her perfumed hair a royal diadem. 

A little satined foot peeps forth with charming grace 

From its embowered retreat of fleecy lace. 

In listless tempo beats a soft tattoo. 

Because, perchance, at loss what else to do 

To show its' full aristocratic turn 

Which otherwise her foes might not discern. 

And now she threads the mystic mazes of a waltz 
By Johann Strauss — and faster beats her pulse. 

A flash of snowy skirts and rick-rack done by hand, 
A cloud of incense fills the ballroom air — 

Perfumes from Lubin's aromatic land — 
(On which the duty's sixty over here.) 
A glimpse of stockings richly clocked. 
And stockings, by the way, as richly stocked; 
She trips the light fantastic to the swell 
Of dreamy music, and she trips it well; 
Ay, like a breeze-blown breath of incense glides along 
The season's feted queen of the bon-ton, 

Alas, that at a fashionable ball 
One's pride should be predestined to a fall 
And dash at fashion's slippered feet 
The mocking idol of its own conceit! 

Something's gone awry! TTie lady's in distress; 
That something, too, concerns the lady's dress. 
She halts and blushes. By the holy token ! 

Can such things happen e'en to the nobility? 
How shall I put it? Button broken. 

Or violated its responsibility? 

With one despairing gasp she gathers skirt and train 
And cuts a Spanish caper for the door. 

While everything stands pitched to a high strain 
And wild confusion reigns upon the floor. 

i8 



Fair madame wishes all were down in Hades, 
And most especially the ladies. 
One last defiant look she casts upon the scene 
And disappears, and never more is seen. 

My moral hear: If you to fashion truckle 
Don't place too much reliance on a buckle. 
Else may you pose, as she, a sorry martyr. 
The painful victim of a cotton garter. 



MISS GLADYS TREMAINE. 
(Courtesy of The Dramatic Mirror.) 

There once was a chap. Van Ransaellar Strap, 

"A great and pre-eminent critic." 
Who'd first dip his pen in wormwood and then 

Proceed to become analytic. 
On tragedy queens commanding the scenes 

No sympathy ever he wasted. 
And actors who came on pinions of fame 

He incontinently lambasted. 
The star who played Lear received but a sneer. 

And oh ! how he roasted Othello. 
He thought that the droll who played the Moor's role 

Should study to play Punchinello. 
And no such a queen had ever been seen 

Since the day that he saw Nora Dooley, 
The rosy and fair, affecting the air 

Of a lady affecting Pat Chouli. 
Oh, how all hearts beat when Strap took his seat. 

Prepared to transfix every error; 
Then pale cheeks were seen behind the great screen. 

And doughty hearts fluttered with terror. 

From 'Frisco to Maine, Miss Gladys Tremaine 

Was starred as a great prima donna. 
Though boomed to the sky, 'twas all in your eye. 

And Strap vowed he'd swoop down upon er. 
"That creature?" cried«he, with sinister glee. 

19 



"I'll stop her! I'll certainly do so. 
My power she shall feel; I'll bring her to heel 

As once I did Signor Caruso." 
Poor Gladys Tremaine ! They warned her m vain 

Of Strap's proverbial asperity. 
For each one felt sure the noted reviewer 

Would pan her with ambi-dexterity. 
But just what befell our diva we'll tell 

In proper and logical order. 
Sans secret evasion, as fits the occasion. 

As well as the truthful recorder. 

Her chance of success was slim at the best, ^^ 
Though billed as "the season's attraction ; 
And there in a "stall," in full view of all. 

Sat Strap with his decks cleared for action. 
She sang off the key in singing high C, 

But her art quite enchanted the gallery. ^^ 
"She's simply sublime, the star of her time! 

Said the press agent, earning his salary. 
While Strap in a stew prepared to review 

Her performance with pen dipped in acid. 
Determined to write a critique that same night 

So bitter that none could surpass it. 
He got on his feet. As he rose from his seat. 

His lofty Olympian forehead 
AH pursed with disdain for Gladys Tremaine, 

Of whom apropos the aforesaid. 
An usher in green, by all eyes unseen. 
Slipped into the hand of the critic 
A billet-doux pink addressed in pale ink 
And dosed with some perfume mephitic. 

*'Dear Master" it read; *7 never have said 

What here I am saving, don t doubt me! 
I ask i^ i" f^^^ — ^ ^^^^l souvenir — 

A scrap of Jjour writing about me! 
Believe me, that's all — unless ^ou would call — 

(/ ask it in fear and in trembling) 
On poor little me in dressing room 3, 

(You II find me mp lares assembling). 
I knorv His amiss to address ^ou like this. 



20 



Considering the yari>ning disparity^ 
TmxCn atom like me and such a ^grandee^ 

But hope you Tpill exercise charity. 
For you are the star of my hopes — ^YES, YOU ARE ! 

/ pray that the Fates may protect you. 
And beg to remain. 

Yours, 

Gladys Tremaine. 
P. S. — The usher*ll direct you. 

How such things obtain I'm loth to explain. 

The acts of great men are a mystery. 
But I needs must refer to things that occur 

In the course of this singular history. 
She brought him to book. He swallowed the hook. 

For, led by the diligent usher. 
Strap had himself ta'en to Gladys Tremaine, 

And harked to that giddy young gusher. 
Just how it was done and how Strap was won 

I shall but relate here succinctly. 
Except to say this, the report of a kiss 

Was heard — ay, and heard quite distinctly. 
By almost a score quite near to the door 

During Strap's most memorial visit. 
And whose knowledge of this, the aforementioned kiss. 

Is vouched for as clear and explicit. 
But this was suppressed, and nobody guessed 

Whatever changed Strap's fierce intention. 
Suffice it to say the very next day 

Appeared a most glowing recension. 
Her cute little ways were mentioned with praise; 

Her orbs were like sunbeams from heaven. 
He mentioned her shoe as of size No. 2, 

(Though considerably nearer to 7). 
He called her a star as great as Farrar, 

A Garden — 'mong singers a queen; he 
Exhausted his lists of great vocalists. 

From Malibran down to Trentini. 
So now Miss Tremaine is famous from Maine 

To the shores of the westermost ocean; 
And this and more, too, was all of it due 

To a kiss well applied as a lotion. 

21 



LITTLE OLD NEW YORK. 
{Courtes}) of ''The Club FelloTv") 

You're welcome to your **little old New York.'* 

I wouldn't take it as a Christmas gift. 
Let those proclaim your charms who kneel to Force, 

Or make their living by some lawless shift. 
You're welcome to your boasted gay White Way, 

Your mighty, high and sky-aspiring domes, 
Your lobster palaces and gilded dens. 

For, well you may, since you possess no homes. 
What is this little old New York but sham — 

A realm of pinchbecks, sharps, and curbstone wits. 
Divorcees, faithless wives, cadets, and sports; 

Where no one cares what follies one commits; 
Where nothing but the Mighty Dollar wins respect ; 

Where bald success can consecrate a crime. 
And ill-got gains distinguish the elect. 

And laurels crown those reeking still with slime; 
Where all that's good and noble meets with sneers 

And drowns, unheeded, in the maddening swirl. 
While social lions fight and kill themselves 

To win the favor of a chorus girl! 
Here snug Presumption lolls in cooling draughts. 

While men of brains sweat in the ante- room 
And cool their heels to beg a conference. 

Till stupid office boys decide their doom. 
Here love is never mentioned save in jest; 

Here sacred thoughts are symptoms of disease; 
Here men grow palsied toiling for success. 

And women live for nothing but to please. 
Here every hand is out to pick your purse; 

Here scarlet women drive in state, like queens. 
While hapless Virtue occupies a hearse 

And Modesty wants even pork and beans ! 
What is this vermin that infests the cheese? 

Bashi-Bazouks, Sicilian bandits, Turks, 
A daily shipload of the scum of eartli; 

Midnight Apaches and besot Berserks; 
Raw Irish bluecoats from the fens and bogs. 

Rule over men and women with a club. 
And False Pretense stalks boldly in the light 

22 



And treats true Merit with contemptuous snub. 
How stands the dial of recorded sin? 

What man was murdered in his bed last night? 
Whose son was kidnapped and whose girl debauched? 

Or mangled by some chauffeur's reckless flight? 
Go, bend your neck to insolence and bluff ; 

Pay tribute to the man in blue from Cork, 
And be a slave beneath the heels of Stuff — 

You're welcome to your little old New York! 



"IN MERRY MAY." 
(Comic Duet from "Baron Trenck.**) 



Cornelia: 

WURZ: 

Cornelia: 

WURZ: 

Cornelia; 
WuRZ: 

Cornelia 



WuRZ: 

Cornelia; 
WuRz: 

Both: 



WuRZ: 

Cornelia: 

WURZ: 

Cornelia: 

WuRZ: 

Cornelia: 

WuRZ: 

Cornelia : 



When I was young and fair to see — 

(A bit of ancient history) — 

I flirted in a girlish way. 

Discreetly, as a maiden may. 

I worshipped you from near and far; 

Oh, yes, I was most popular! 

I wrote a sonnet to your nose! 

And I blushed crimson as a rose. 

But secretly I longed for you, 

Just as the rose longs for the dew. 

And I for you — and I for you! 

'Tis very true, we did, we two. 

I worshipped thee in poetry! 

Goo-goo! goo-goo! 

Ah, such the raptures that we remember 

From days of youth, of song and play. 
But what a difference in gray December, 

From things we did in m'-m'-m'-merry May. 

II. 

I'm not so young as once I was. 
That statement is too true, alas ! 
But laurels now my brows adorn. 
Of all else you have been well shorn. 
I have a fascinating way; 

yes, my dear, you're quite au fait! 

1 sing my merry tralalee. 
And picture love — in poetry. 
But oh ! for the reality ! 



23 



PB / 1913 



WuRZ : My heart's as young as't used to be, 
Cornelia: I fondly hope that this be true. 
WuRZ : It is, my love, I promise you, 
Cornelia: Then lean on me for sympathy. 

Goo-goo, goo-goo! 
Both: Ah, such the raptures that we remember, etc. 



24 



018 407 BlU ' 



